Mon Aug 15, 2011 12:55 pm
I'm guessing that part of what's going on with the discrepancy in the amount of heather is in the difference between fresh heather and dried heather. It takes quite a lot of fresh heather to make a 5 gal batch. I have made heather ale many times-- and, in my method, which achieves a very similar ale to the Fraoch, it takes about 4 cups of dried heather tips, IIRC. (I once denuded several bushes in my garden of their blossoms to make one fresh heather batch!) Sweet gale is used in the Fraoch, Three Floyds puts a smidge of lavendar in their heather ale. I've learned to be very careful with lavendar additions... or omit entirely. Heather honey, although expensive and somewhat hard to find, added right at the end of boil, lends a fantastic aroma when you pop the bottle open! I know some add it to secondary, but I've been pleased with adding it right at end of boil. The Fraoch heather ale is a rather light colored ale; others tend to be darker with the addition of amber and brown malts. In the recipes I've seen, the darker versions use less heather than the lighter versions. I also prefer WY Scottish Ale yeast to the White Lab version, for the slightly smoky, scotchlike flavor it can impart. Hops are usually downplayed alot in heather ale. Saaz might work with the light spice notes it can impart, but I've usually used NB, or something similar in the 15-20 IBU range.
Alewife
On mind: Saison
In primary:
Conditioning:
Ready to drink: APA; Dobby's Magic (Holiday Tripel); Sour Mash Farmhouse Ale; Bung Ho! Pale Ale; Masham Old Ale; Entredit (Belgian Dark Strong); Jester (Tripel)